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Pawn of Prophecy

Pawn of Prophecy

Titel: Pawn of Prophecy Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: David Eddings
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Seline had donned plain garb and now resembled nothing quite so much as two moderately prosperous Sendars on a business trip. Queen Layla, who was not to go with them, rode beside her husband, talking earnestly to him with an expression on her face that seemed almost to hover on the verge of tears. The party was accompanied by soldiers, cloaked against the raw, chill wind off the sea.
    At the foot of the street which led down from the palace to the harbor, the stone wharves of Sendar jutted out into the choppy water, and there, rocking and straining against the hawsers which held her, was their ship. She was a lean vessel, narrow of beam and high-prowed, with a kind of wolfish appearance that did little to quiet Garion's nervousness about his first sea voyage. Lounging about on her deck were a number of savage-looking sailors, bearded and garbed in shaggy garments made of fur. With the exception of Barak, these were the first Chereks Garion had ever seen, and his first impression was that they would probably prove to be totally unreliable.
    "Barak!" a burly man halfway up the mast shouted and dropped hand over hand down a steeply slanting rope to the deck and then jumped across to the wharf.
    "Greldik!" Barak roared in response, swung down from his horse and clasped the evil-looking sailor in a bear hug.
    "It would seem that Lord Barak is acquainted with our captain," the Earl of Seline observed.
    "That's disquieting," Silk said wryly. "I was hoping for a sober, sensible captain of middle years and a conservative disposition. I'm not fond of ships and sea travel to begin with."
    "I'm told that Captain Greldik is one of the finest seamen in all of Cherek," the earl assured him.
    "My Lord," Silk said with a pained look, "Cherek definitions can be deceptive." Sourly he watched Barak and Greldik toasting their reunion with tankards of ale that had been passed down to them from the ship by a grinning sailor.
    Queen Layla had dismounted and she embraced Aunt Pol. "Please watch out for my poor husband, Pol," she said with a little laugh that quivered a bit. "Don't let those Alorn bullies goad him into doing anything foolish."
    "Of course, Layla," Aunt Pol said comfortingly.
    "Now, Layla," King Fulrach said in an embarrassed voice. "I'll be all right. I'm a grown man, after all."
    The plump little queen wiped her eyes. "I want you to promise to wear warm clothes," she said, "and not to sit up all night drinking with Anheg."
    "We're on serious business, Layla," the kind said. "There won't be time for any of that."
    "I know Anheg too well," the queen sniffed. She turned to Mister Wolf, stood on her tiptoes and kissed his bearded cheek. "Dear Belgarath," she said. "When this is over, promise that you and Pol will come back for a long visit."
    "I promise, Layla," Mister Wolf said gravely.
    "The tide is turning, Lord King," Greldik said, "and my ship is growing restless."
    "Oh dear," the queen said. She put her arms around the king's neck and buried her face in his shoulder.
    "Now, now," Fulrach said awkwardly.
    "If you don't go now, I'm going to cry right here in public," she said, pushing him away.
    The stones of the wharf were slippery, and the slim Cherek ship bobbed and rolled in the chop. The narrow plank they had to cross heaved and swayed dangerously, but they all managed to board without accident. The sailors slipped the hawsers and took their places at the oars. The lean vessel leaped away from the wharf and moved swiftly into the harbor past the stout and bulky merchantmen anchored nearby. Queen Layla stood forlornly on the wharf, surrounded by tall soldiers. She waved a few times and then stood watching, her chin lifted bravely.
    Captain Greldik took his place at the tiller with Barak by his side and signaled to a squat, muscular warrior crouched nearby. The squat man nodded and pulled a ragged square of sailcloth off a hide-topped drum.
    He began a slow beat, and the oarsmen immediately took up the rhythm. The ship surged ahead and made for the open sea.
    Once they were beyond the protection of the harbor, the swells grew so ponderous that the ship no longer rocked but ran instead down the back of each wave and up the face of the next. The long oars, dipping to the rhythm of the sullen drum, left little swirls on the surface of the waves. The sea was lead-gray beneath the wintry sky, and the low, snow-covered coastline of Sendaria slid by on their right, bleak and desolate-looking.
    Garion spent most of the day

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